Wednesday, April 24, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Norman Mailer

« All quotes from this author
 

The horror of the Twentieth Century was the size of each new event, and the paucity of its reverberation.
--
A Fire on the Moon (1970), Pt. 1, Ch. 1

 
Norman Mailer

» Norman Mailer - all quotes »



Tags: Norman Mailer Quotes, Authors starting by M


Similar quotes

 

The major political event of the twentieth century is the death of socialism.

 
Irving Kristol
 

As the corporation's size and power grew, so did the need to assuage people's fears of it. The corporation suffered its first full-blown legitimacy crisis in the wake of the early-twentieth-century merger movement, when, for the first time, many Americans realized that corporations, now turned behemoths, threatened to overwhelm their social institutions and governments.

 
Joel Bakan
 

The postwar [WWII] GI Bill of Rights - and the enthusiastic response to it on the part of America's veterans - signaled the shift to the knowledge society. Future historians may consider it the most important event of the twentieth century.
We are clearly in the midst of this transformation; indeed, if history is any guide, it will not be completed until 2010 or 2020. But already it has changed the political, economic and moral landscape of the world.

 
Peter F. Drucker
 

It's all nonsense to say that the Fifteenth Century can't possibly speak to the Twentieth, because it is the Fifteenth and not the Twentieth, and because those two Centuries haven't got a Common Denominator. They have. It's Human Nature.

 
Frederick Rolfe
 

Sculpture is, in the twentieth century, a wide field of experience, with many facets of symbol and material and individual calligraphy. But in all these varied and exciting extensions of our experience we always come back tot the fact that we are human beings of such and such a size, biologically the same as primitive man, and that it is through drawing and observing, or observing and drawing, that we equate our bodies with our landscape.

 
Barbara Hepworth
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact